
Over 260 debt mutual funds beat fixed deposits rate in 2 years. Should you switch?
With SBI cutting FD rates by 20 bps and over 260 debt mutual funds outperforming them, many experts believe debt funds now offer a more attractive, tax-efficient option for low-risk investors seeking better returns than FDs.In the current market scenario, short-duration funds, medium-duration funds, dynamic bond funds, and gilt funds can be good investment options with different horizons.'In the current environment, short-duration funds and medium-duration funds are ideal for those with investment horizons of 1–3 years and 3–5 years, respectively. Dynamic bond funds are also suitable for those who want fund managers to actively manage duration based on changing interest rates. For risk-averse investors, gilt funds, which invest in government securities, can be a good alternative, offering safety with potential for capital gains if interest rates decline further, said Adhil Shetty, CEO of Bankbazaar.com.
Also Read | Sensex @82,300: Should mutual fund investors alter their investment strategy?
State Bank of India (SBI) has cut its fixed deposit (FD) interest rates for both the general public and senior citizens, effective May 16, 2025. According to the website, SBI has reduced FD rates by 20 basis points (bps) across all tenors. The latest FD rate cut comes just a month after the cut announced on April 15. The interest rate applicable for a tenure of 2 years to less than 3 years is reduced to 6.7% against 6.9% before.
ETMutualFunds analysed the two-year performance of all debt mutual fund categories alongside the interest rates on fixed deposits offered by SBI, India's largest public sector bank, in the same period.
Around 264 debt mutual funds outperformed the bank deposit rate of 6.7% offered by SBI over the past two years. Four schemes gave double-digit returns, of which the top three performers were from the credit risk fund category.
DSP Credit Risk Fund delivered the highest return of 18.7% over the last two years, followed by HSBC Credit Risk Fund and Aditya Birla SL Credit Risk Fund, which provided 13.8% and 12% returns, respectively, during the same period.
Aditya Birla SL Medium Term Plan delivered a return of 10.4%, followed by Axis Gilt Fund and Axis Floater Fund, which gave 9.6% and 9.5% respectively in the same period. Motilal Oswal Liquid Fund was the last one to offer a 6.8% return in the said period.
Also Read | Railways PSU ETF delivers 16% in a week. Is this the right opportunity for portfolio diversification?
After the outperformance by debt mutual funds, the expert recommends that a prudent strategy is to match the fund category with your investment horizon, a laddering strategy, where you invest across different maturities, can help manage reinvestment risk and interest rate fluctuations and starting a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) can also help average out costs and reduce the impact of market volatility.'A prudent strategy is to match the fund category with your investment horizon. For example, use short-duration funds for up to 3 years and medium-duration or dynamic bond funds for longer terms. A laddering strategy, where you invest across different maturities, can help manage reinvestment risk and interest rate fluctuations,' Shetty said.He further advices that starting a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) can also help average out costs, reduce the impact of market volatility and investors should focus on funds with high credit quality, avoiding those heavily exposed to lower-rated instruments. With the RBI MPC meeting scheduled for next month, it's worth noting that the central bank has cut the repo rate by 25 basis points in each of the last two meetings, following a prolonged pause at 6.5% across 11 consecutive meetings.The expert mentions that it's also important to monitor the interest rate cycle, if further rate cuts are expected, longer-duration funds may deliver capital appreciation and lastly, one should understand the exit load and taxation rules; debt funds held for over 3 years earlier benefited from indexation, but recent changes to tax rules mean post-tax returns should be carefully evaluated.Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman in the last Budget made no change for the debt mutual funds, which continued to be taxed as per the tax slab.Around 40 debt mutual funds have failed to beat the fixed deposit interest rate offered by SBI. These funds gave returns ranging between 6% to 6.7% in the said period.Bank of India Credit Risk Fund gave 6.1% and Motilal Oswal Ultra Short Term Fund gave the lowest return of 6% in the mentioned time period.
Also Read | BSE and Adani Enterprises among stocks that HDFC Mutual Fund bought and sold in April
Now coming to the comparison between fixed deposits and debt mutual funds, fixed deposits are considered low-risk investments as they offer a guaranteed return for the predetermined period whereas debt mutual funds have a slightly higher risk associated with them because of the interest rate movement. The second point of difference comes on the taxation part. The investment in tax-saving fixed deposits is exempted under Section 80C of the Income Tax Act whereas for the debt mutual funds there is no such exemptions. But both fixed deposits and debt mutual funds are classified under the same asset class.As the fixed deposits offer lower interest rates compared to debt mutual funds, Shetty recommends that investors in the higher tax brackets benefit the most from switching to debt mutual funds, as traditional FD interest is fully taxable as per slab, while mutual funds—although recently taxed differently—still offer relatively efficient returns in some cases.He adds that savers seeking better liquidity and flexibility than FDs can also consider debt mutual funds, as they generally offer quicker redemption with lower penalties and retired individuals and conservative investors, who are looking for stable income but are open to a little market-linked risk, can shift partially to safe options like gilt or banking & PSU funds.
'Importantly, those with a long-term outlook and an understanding of interest rate movements can strategically allocate to longer-duration or dynamic bond funds for potentially higher returns. However, this shift should be made keeping in mind the risks associated with NAV fluctuations, especially in a volatile rate environment,' he said.
We considered all debt categories such as gilt fund, long duration, medium to long duration, gilt fund - constant maturity 10 year, credit risk funds, liquid funds, money market funds, overnight funds, corporate bond fund, dynamic bond fund, floating rate bond, banking and PSU funds, medium duration, low duration, short duration funds. We excluded debt based target maturity funds. We considered regular and growth options. We calculated returns for the last two years. We calculated CAGR returns as in debt mutual funds, returns up to one year are annualised, and returns above one year are CAGR. Note, one should not make investment or redemption decisions based on the above exercise. One should always consider risk profile, investment horizon and goal before making investment decisions.
(Disclaimer: Recommendations, suggestions, views and opinions given by the experts are their own. These do not represent the views of The Economic Times)
If you have any mutual fund queries, message on ET Mutual Funds on Facebook/Twitter. We will get it answered by our panel of experts. Do share your questions on ETMFqueries@timesinternet.in alongwith your age, risk profile, and Twitter handle.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles
&w=3840&q=100)

Business Standard
4 hours ago
- Business Standard
As MFs gear up to launch SIFs, distribution takes the centre stage
Fund houses initiate discussions, roll out training programs for distributors Abhishek Kumar Mumbai Listen to This Article With the specialised investment fund (SIF) licence in their bags, and scheme approvals in sight, the first set of entrants in the SIF space has started working on the distribution puzzle. Five fund houses — SBI, Edelweiss, Quant, Mirae, and ITI — say they have initiated discussions with key distribution verticals, including wealth management firms, banks, and national and individual MF distributors (MFDs). 'We are proactively engaging with all key distribution segments, including banks, MFDs, and wealth managers. Among them, MFDs and wealth managers are well-positioned to drive SIF distribution. They already cater to a sizable base of high networth

Economic Times
6 hours ago
- Economic Times
ET Market Watch: Markets up but jittery: What's spooking investors?
Transcript Hi, you're listening to ET Markets Radio, I am your host Neha V Mahajan. Welcome to a fresh episode of ET Market Watch -- where we bring you the latest news from the world of stock markets every single day. Let's get to it:Sensex up, Nifty steady... but markets are on edge!Why did the market rise despite sharp swings and global jitters? Let's break it gained 193 points, Nifty closed above 25, don't let the green fool you. Both indices slipped sharply from their day's highs, thanks to volatile trade, global cues, and SEBI's crackdown on Jane and IT stocks led the gains. Bajaj Finance rose 1.6%, and Infosys and ICICI Bank supported the Trent crashed nearly 12% after warning of slower revenue growth. Nuvama downgraded the stock markets? Mostly in the red, Europe's major indices slipped, Korea's Kospi tanked 2%, and U.S. futures dipped as investors braced for Trump's tariff deadline on July barred U.S. trading firm Jane Street and froze ₹4,800+ crore over alleged manipulation in the Indian derivatives market. That shook investor say markets are pausing after a strong rally. Eyes are now on Q1 earnings, Trump's tariff call, and a possible U.S.-India trade Nifty's hammer candle hints at a bullish rebound, if it stays above 25,300, a jump to 25,800–26,100 is oil eased. Rupee ended India's market mood? Wait-and-watch mode, cautious optimism, but cracks are visible.


The Print
8 hours ago
- The Print
Stock markets muscle through intense volatility amid buying rush in heavyweights
The 50-share NSE Nifty inched up by 55.70 points or 0.22 per cent to 25,461. After oscillating between highs and lows in intra-day trade, the 30-share BSE Sensex ended 193.42 points or 0.23 per cent higher at 83,432.89. During the day, it hit a high of 83,477.86 and a low of 83,015.83, gyrating 462.03 points. Mumbai, Jul 4 (PTI) Benchmark indices Sensex and Nifty ended higher on Friday in a highly volatile trade amid a buying rush in banking and other bellwether stocks on the back of a rally in the US markets. From the Sensex firms, Bajaj Finance, Infosys, Hindustan Unilever, ICICI Bank, HCL Tech, UltraTech Cement, Bajaj Finserv, State Bank of India, Tata Consultancy Services, Reliance Industries, Axis Bank and Larsen & Toubro were among the major gainers. However, Trent, Tata Steel, Tech Mahindra and Maruti were among the laggards. 'The tone was negative in the first half; however, a decent recovery in heavyweight stocks pared all the losses as the day progressed, helping the index close near the day's high at the 25,461 level. 'With all eyes on the impending US-India trade deal as the tariff deadline approaches, participants are hopeful for a favourable outcome, which could provide the much-needed trigger for the next leg of the market up move,' Ajit Mishra – SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd, said. The BSE midcap gauge went up by 0.23 per cent and smallcap index climbed marginally by 0.17 per cent. Among BSE sectoral indices, oil & gas jumped 1.26 per cent, energy (0.90 per cent), realty (0.87 per cent), IT (0.67 per cent), healthcare (0.64 per cent), BSE Focused IT (0.65 per cent) and teck (0.52 per cent). Metal, telecommunication, auto, consumer discretionary and commodities were the laggards. As many as 2,261 stocks advanced while 1,788 declined and 140 remained unchanged on the BSE. 'The Indian market is experiencing a pause as investors adopt a wait-and-watch strategy ahead of the impending US tariff deadline with mixed global cues. Ongoing FII outflows reflect a risk-off approach, while DII inflows are offering partial support. 'Following the recent rally, main indices are hovering near peak valuation levels, limiting further upside, which is highly dependent on Q1 earnings and details of the trade deal,' Vinod Nair, Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited, said. In Asian markets, Japan's Nikkei 225 index and Shanghai's SSE Composite index settled higher while South Korea's Kospi and Hong Kong's Hang Seng ended lower. European markets were trading in the negative territory. The US markets ended in the positive territory on Thursday. Global oil benchmark Brent crude dropped 1.03 per cent to USD 68.03 a barrel. Meanwhile, markets regulator Sebi has barred US-based Jane Street Group from the securities markets and directed the group to disgorge unlawful gains of Rs 4,843 crore for allegedly manipulating stock indices through positions taken in derivatives segment. This could be the highest disgorgement amount ever directed by the Securities and Exchange Board of India (Sebi). Foreign Institutional Investors (FIIs) offloaded equities worth Rs 1,481.19 crore on Thursday, according to exchange data. Domestic Institutional Investors (DIIs) bought stocks worth Rs 1,333.06 crore. On Thursday, the Sensex dropped by 170.22 points or 0.20 per cent to settle at 83,239.47. The Nifty declined by 48.10 points or 0.19 per cent to 25,405.30. 'Indian equity markets opened on a flat note Friday as investors remained cautious ahead of a potential India–US trade agreement and digested regulatory action against a major global trading entity. Both indices dipped during mid-session but recovered to end on a positive note…,' Gaurav Garg, Analyst, Lemonn Markets Desk, said. On the weekly front, the BSE benchmark gauge dropped 626.01 points or 0.74 per cent, and the Nifty declined 176.8 points or 0.68 per cent. PTI SUM HVA This report is auto-generated from PTI news service. ThePrint holds no responsibility for its content.